North Idaho College Cardinal Review Vol 36 No 14, May 7, 1982

Page 1

Student Board rescinds tape recorder ban 11,-Pullala The pcurion. v. hich conumed approximatel) 2uO signatures. called for rotaung the position of the student board adviser every tl>o years. An argument then ensued as to v.hether the cha n~e woul d invoh·e revising the AS NIC Consmutioo or the byl2v.s. A counter·peution, presented by Carolyn Pfister students. opposed and signed by approximate!) any changes in the cons1ituuon. but On and Sen. Greg Tolbert claimed the counter-pc1111on ,-35 m elevant since the origin11 pennon did not propose any cons111u11onal changes The board then \"Otcd over-.helmingly not to make

The ASNIC Student Board voted m 115 April 27 meeting to reverse the Apnl l J decision that allowed r.pe recorders 10 be banned by the request of any board member.

The reversal was proposed by Galen Schuler. who cited th e negative r espo nse the board r eceived follo.ving an ed11orial in the Cardinal Review. The motion passed by a vote of 4.3 and wrapped up a month·long con1roversy 011cr whethe r tape recorders should be allowed at open meetings.

-o

At the May 4 meeting a dis pute arose over a petnron presented by n""'ly·clccted Sen. J ohn Ott.

------- Number Volume 36,

14

3n} clungcs concerning its ad~rser; this prompted a hc;itcd exchange bcNeen Tolben. who a~sed the board of not hstcnrng to students. :ind President J im Brcv.er. .. This board docs not do an)1hing for the students Jmmorc." Tolbcn ~id...All it rs is a lecture in p;rliamenu ry pr ocedure, and tha t's all II has become throughout this whole year. You stop and look at what 11.e've done for the students this year: it's not ,en much. We've done a lot of parliamen· my procedure, and that's 11. ·· .. ,1r. Tolben ... Bm-·er s;i1d... m:ay I pomt out to , ou. sir. that , ou 3rc one of the people ""ho is const.1ntly porniing ou t p:arlia.mentary procedure ... .. Well tlmt's the onl) -..a> )OU c:in get some of the ,1udents' ,icv.s across like 11.T1tc-rn candidates. like upe recorder bans: ma)be that's the "'aY you hlve 10 do it ... Tolbcn replied. In other business the board: - - approved the budget for the 1982-83 school )e:ar with :a projected rc,enue of S70.SOO. -donated SSOO in student funds to the library buildrng fund. --appropmued SSOO 10 1he women's athlCI dcpanmeot for a banquet.

Friday, MAy 7, 1982

Afte r the feu11t Stadent Acllvltlu Director Diane Wlalte reuhct a "act c,ca" pie at the Campa Due plcn.lc lu1 Friday for M\'lna dod&cd another one at an C\"ent tartlcr In the year.

300 to celebrate commencement Approximately JOO gradu111es v.111 take pan in NIC's commencement e.1erc1SCS to

be held Frid1), May 21 at 10 a .m , in the Pc!T) Chrisu:anson gymnuium The program. v. h1ch is open 10 the public, will feature guest s pcucr Freden clt Wr!lia.rns, profc~r and founding dean of Anncnbcrg School of CommuntC1111ons , Un1vcrs1t)· of Southern California. Caps and gov.11s 1UC to be p1cted up, free of chuge, at the college boob torc •ccording 10 the follov. ing alphaberical order- lut names beginning wub A through J-May 12-14: K through Z-Ma> 17- 19 If this 1$ not convenient. students should contact the college bookstore so that special arnngcmenb can be made. Graduation invitationJ> will l\lso be a, aillable at the boobtorc for 20 cents each.

("-_ _in_s_id_e_t_h_e_c_r___J Grade ln.lh.tlon pf.a&uln& l\1C 1.itittue10rs ... ..... ......................................paac 4 NIC ,[lldcn1 "ritcrs display poetic accompllshmenis .......................... paacs 7-10 Trad.: qusllilcrs read) for rrglonal com.pcdtlon ... .................................. page 11

lmpilcadoos of mllilar) dnft explored .......... ... ................................... paae 14


May 7. 1982/ Cardinal Review -2-

Having a big fat attack? There are many people today who are weight-conscious. calorie-counling addicts that literally starve themselves from enjoying a good. home-rooked meal. Yet it always seems as if it is these fanatics that one catches drooling over llle "Aren't You Hungry?'" Burger King commercials and the "Ooohh , Ahhh!" effects of Pizza Hut. Sure. Martha, let's pop over to McDonald's for dinner and grab us a Big Mac. fries and a shake. Rather. why not pop in for 1.116 fat- and sugar- saturated calories? Or instead. why not "munch out" on that "'Thick 'n Chewy,'' dnpping with cheese and grease. 213-calorie, sodium-laden piece of pizza? Sounds delicious. right? Blah! There are over 100.000 fast food eateries in the United States todav (one for every 2.300 Amencans) that supply naive consumers with bunks· of fat and sugar which contain more calories than nutrients. For Instan ce, the Colonel's "Extra Crisp}" three-piece chicken dmner contains 52 grams of protein, 63 grams of carbohydrates. 54 grams of fat and a whopping 1.915 milligrams of sodium. all of v.hich total to 950 calories. And 10 all those people v.bo think the) can elude the calories by switching from beef to a fish sandwich. surprise I One McDonald's "Filet-0-Fish" has 402 calories. and lllat is not counting the enra calories gained from the soft drink needed 10 wash it dov. n. Can Americans be cured from "the Big Mac anack?" Who knows? Martha just went back for more onions.

laura hubbard

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Rules for posterity It is perhaps a cruel foci of life that rules go,·em JUSt about everything we do. For some. this includes following a very ancient set of rules called the Ten Commandments. E\'eryone knows that these are etched in stone :ind that no one messes ";th the guy who made 1hem. So. as I make my exodus from NIC, I am leaving my very own 1en commandments behind for anyone who may w:i,"!t to be a joumalis1 when he/ she grows up. I) Thou shah not e,·er forget thy o-doz. for surely thou shalt have to cover a meeting the first day that thou doest this. 2) Thou shalt not IJ)' to use logical qu_estions when interviewing a politician. for surely all manners of b.s. will visit themselves upon you. J) Thou shalt not answer the phone on the day the paper comes out lest you are in trouble over a story printed therein. 4) Thou shalt learn to cringe at the words, " Now, this is off the record ... " SJ Thou shalt ne ver be without pencil lllld pad. 6) Thou shalt watch "All the President's Meo" at le3St once a month to put your paper's problems in perspective. 7) Thou shalt learn to deal with the fact that e,•encually your writing ,,ill end up lying in a wastebasket. lining a bird cage or being used to housebreak someone's dog. 81 Thoo shalt jog at least once a day because you never 1:now when running skills may be needed. 9) Thou shalt honor and obey thy adviser and all other prominent elders in all situations unless there is a scandal involved. 10) Thou shalt have a nice summer and a nice life. This piece is written in hopes that you have enjoyed more of these columns 1han you have disliked this year and that you have been ple.ised with the paper as a whole.

Craig praises Cardinal Review Dear editor: Congratulations on the Cardinal Review's seventh consecutive AllAmerican rating and the marks of distinction for excellence in journalism awarded by the University of Minnesota Associated Collegiate Press! You are all to be commended for

your excellence in creativity. con· tent and maturity which is continually illustra ted in the Cardi na l Review. Keep up the good work l Bes1 wishes. Very truly yours, Larry E. Craig Member of Congress

(___c_a_rd_in_al_r_e_vi_e_w__J The Cardinal Review ls published seml-monthJy by the Publlcallons Workshop class at North Idaho College. Members of the CR stall wilJ suhe lo present the news (alrly, accurately and without prejudice. Opinions u pressed on the editoriaJ page do not necessarily reOect the views or the ASNIC or the NlC administration. The CR ls entered as third-ems material at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 83814. American Collegiate Press All-American Newspaper editor .................•...•..•...•.......•........................•.•...... Laura Hubbard news editor ...... .......................................................... BUI Bradshaw associAte editor ........................................................Sbarlyn Dittman sports editor ................................................................... Greg Lyde pbotognphy editor ....................................................Brenda Mwpby arts and entert.aloment editor .......................................... Bruce Padget ad,•ertis l.ng manager .................................... .............Sbarlyn Dittman adviser ....... .. ,.........................••..•..•......•...•..••..........•...Tim P1lgrlm cartoonists .. ,•, ...•. ,...........................Doug Allender and Cheryl LaNlier staff members ............................................................ Jadde Appel, Paul Baler, Barry Baker, Joseph Gramer, Stan Ball, Tresa Mciaablla, Bruce Mallen, Ann Rauer, M.uceOa Saocbn


M a)

7, 1982/ Cardlnal Re,iew .3.

[~_m_o_ri_e~op=---in_io_n___Jr-------Board action responsible We congratulate the ASNJC S1uden1 Board on us April 27 decision 10 repeal its earlier vote. which :illowed board members to ask that meetings nor be recorded. Though the decision to rescind the act barely passed (4-3). the members who voted for if should be commended. Galen Schuler. Greg Tolben. Jane Jeffries and Greg Sausser nil supponed the repeal. As it now stands. the board and the Cardinal Review (or anyone else who may wish to tape a i:.eeting) have an informal agreement that novice speakers coming to the board may ask to have the recorders shut off. This is m accordance with what the CR first proposed to the board several weeks ago. Carolyn Pfister's assertion that the motion was passed for the protection of guest speakers seems nonsensical since the only difference between th:it act and the informal agree ment is that board members will not be :ifforded the luxury of not being recorded. We applaud the willingnei.s of the four board members (and President Jim Brewer) to admit they were wrong and to face the public that elected them. .When looking beyond recent controversies. one can see many positive things that the board has done this year such as helping with this year's convoca1ions (probably one of the best ever). the excellent popcorn forums and the attempted completion of the SUB basement construction. We only hope that in the futu re the board will keep in sight its maio purpo!.e- representing the s1udcnts of NIC-rather than trying to shut out those people they arc there to rep resent.

In letter to editor

Senator chides colleagues Dear editor: The latest student board meeting proved once ngoin how the board cou ld cnre Jes:. about st udent int cre!,.t S. Thi!. time several students h3d petitioned the board to niter its method of appointing lhc faculty odvber. TI1e proposal would hove merely made it so that one 1>erson could not be the faculty adviser indefinitely. Once again the pclitioncrs met with hostilit y on the port of the board, and the board not unly refu sed 10 listen. but employed its parliamentary pro· cedurc tool to den)• di:,cussion. It's ironic th:it the opening 10 Roben·s Rules of Order (the bible or the s1uden1 board) sovs 1h01 parliamentary procedure i:. used only 10 fa cilita1c dicu:,:,ion . Unfortunately. the bonrd has rcg~larly turned its meetings into pnrhamentary procedure lessons and in the process denied students the ability to disc:uss issues that the board disagreed with. Suc:h as when another student and my.self received a petition with more signatures than voted in the e_lections calling for new presidential elections after the board so blatantly screwed up the last ones. th~ board disagreed and simply ad1oumcd the meeting on us.

11,e same was true when o student brought forward the idea of rototing the faculty adviser-the bo:ird adjourned the meeting on him. And :11 the lates1 meeung. when o,•er 200 signatures were pre,cmed lo the board calling for rotation of the faculty nd\'i\cr. the board once again refused 10 hsten. Sc,·cr:il students hove commented to be how much meeting time ts wa:.ted on pnrlinmentary procedu re . ei1her m the form of pro· longing meetings or when used as a tool to directl) deny the students 1hc obilit)' 10 discuss issues the) percehe as imponont. Ma\'bC the board would be a liule 'more re:.ponsive to student intcrc:.ts nnd a liltle lc!i.:. concerned \\ 1th their silly parliamentar) p~dure \\ hen the focultI ad,·iser s topped giving membe;s of the board their grades. Possibly. they \\'OUId h3ve voted different.ly on the rotation iden-who kn ows, the, didn't let U!> discuss the idea. • Greg Tolben ASNIC senator P.S. Ask your board members what they have done for you this yenr besides use parliameotacy procedure to stop student ideas. An honest an!>-wer is very little.

r

bill bradshaw

[Il

The 'hot' still bothers Well. it's fioall\' over. Another semester. another school year, and a lot hos happened beyond our world of NIC and Coeur d'Alene. But serious!) , has anythlng really changed? Some of the names and places have. yet most of the issues are about the same and no one is innocent. Hot spots around the world still keep us warm with the prospect of both conventional and nuclear war. Brushfire wars in Central America still rage-El Salvador mny have had ao election. but the fighting goes on there and in Guatemala. Iran and Iraq are still butting beads. Martial law in Poland docs not make many headlines an}'!Tlore. but it continues along with the So,;et occupation of Afghanistan and Soviet domination over much of the rest of the world. And. as since ancient tlme:s, the Middle East is still producing casualties ... nowadays they arc mostly Jewish and Arabian. But the Middle ED.st should not be mentioned without noting that this unlikely place bas also produced a possible ray of hope wi th Israel's return of the Sinai Pcninsul:1 to Egypt and Egyptian recognition of lsnel. Howc\er, whether this is really a step toward peace or merely a tempor:l!) Egyptian appeasement of Israel remains to be seen. lo the t.:nited States. everyone is still concerned :ibout the possibiht) of nuclear war. As was somewhat exhibited at NIC's recent convocations week. it does seem that people are beginning 10 accept the fact that when the term ''nuclear" is used that war is synonymous with holocaust. The question of survival no longer seems to be much of a question. b1 case or ucb a holocaust the " Juel.)" ones would, more than like!). be aJI but those few who managed to survive because of the remoteness of their location. Any of the world's hot spots. including some ne" ones such as the Fillklond Islands. could conceivably escalate into a nuclear holocaust, ..,. bich lS the fear of many. But will it? We'll just have 10 v. ait and see. There's no potot in sitting around chev.iog ouT nails over it. though, so should it occw:. have a happy holocaust.

_J

[___n_e_w_s_c_o_n_n_e_c_t_io_n_s

Grode inflation Md the problems associated with It are discussed in a story on page -I of this issue. It is a question that affects us all-teachers and srudents. Bob Kabler's point that a "B" grade has now become the s1andard should be considered. It seems to be the anirude of many that a · 'C" is no longer considered "aver3ge" as it was intended 10 be. This crentes problems both for the university the student tranfers 10-tbe one that anticipates an above-average student and gets an average one-and for the "A" srudents, who in reality range from "B'. students to those higher on the se;:ile. On the other hand, teache rs should certainly not be expected to "babysit" adult snidents by dropping them when the srudents are too lazy 10 take care of the problem themselves. Instructors should also not be "punis hed" for taking the responsibility to do so.


Ma) 7, 1982/Cardlnal Rc,,iew -4-

Grade inflation trend prompts revised tactics b) M•rcclla Sancbet The grade inflation problem at SIC 10 gnde illlJ different but mste3d 10 b forcing man) 1J1S1rue1or~ to tum to ~ stop "ithdra,.·ing tho~c: srudcnts who different way of distributtng gnde~ refuse to shov. up for class Thl.S ,,,ay. the number of · ·Fs" g1,·en would evenly. According to Ra} Stone. '\lC dean of proportiomuely an crease: 1hcrcb, e· qu3lwng grade distribution. instruction. the cumuhm,·c grade point average at SIC 1s 100 high in both the 'English instruclor Hm McLeod academic and vocational schools :ig~. While the natlooal college GPA "If the admirustrauon feels th:11 i'\IC totals around 2.25. stall ,11..s compiled has a i?radc lllflauon." he said "then by Stone show thAt the academi, side tn51nJCIOr\ ..,11 JUS1 11:2,e the lt1ds ID of NIC a, er ages 2.SJ and the ~ocauon· class (tn\tead of ,..lthdra\\ ing the ol pomon 2 .b8. both of ,. h1ch arc Mudcnts thcmschcs) Theo ~r.ide substantilllh luger than the nauonal mnauon ..;11 go dov.n." a,•crogc. Ac1. rd1ng to ,,. eld1ng ln<;1ruc1or "It is critical tf mstructon cons:sDa, id Sheehan, 1he ,ocauonal pro· U1J1tly grade too high." Stone said. "If grams are hltely 10 ha.,e h12hcr our le.ids get o ·c grade. the~ h3•e to cumulati,e GPAs becau,;e \tudcnts be able to continue doing ·c· 11.ort at ~re much more moU\ated to obtain other colleges." higher grades According 10 3 report released b) ''Their lntcttSI ls onh ID one Oeld Stone. students who transferred 10 the instead of Just gencr:il ·courses:· he Univ~rsity of Idaho hod significant!~ said lower GPAs than those they obwned Sheehan also s:ud that grades tend ot NIC. Students who rccched an 10 be higher in his classes because only arithmetic meon gr3de point a\Crage 14 students ,...bo pas.s a preliminary of 2.87 a1 NlC dropped 10 a 2.61 after examinauon are allov. ed to enter the transferring to U of I. class. After tbls d.lla, os well as other " We don't get the people who arc information. was recewcd. Stone decigomg 10 flwik." Sheehan said. ded to 3dvise insll"Uctors to toughen Cbemistn and matbematlrs their grading systems nnd stan giving Instructor Robert Kabler believes less "As" and more "Os". Stone is ngh1 an trying to lower the Conflkt arose. though. 11hen some o,erall GPA of the college. in1aructors discovered that their cu, "I think 11 •~ appropn:11c for the mulative doss GPAs would have been school 10 v.o~ :ibout gr.ides." he lower if the instructor withdrownJs hod S31d been included in the tabuhuions. .. A B' grade is the most popular According to Virginia Johnson. grade ghen This is unfair to good English department chairperson and students ,..ho -..·orlt bard to get illl instructor. the cumulative GPA for her ·A·.", Kabler said. "Their h.lJ'd wort classes would hnve sho\\ n :1 signi6c3nl doc:.n't ~how." drop if the number of s1uden1s she Accordl:og to Kabler. grades could withdrew from clllSS herself had been consequently be made higher because included. of the indi,idualized help s1udco1s " I bne bffn withdrawing students reccl\e at a commuoi~· college such a.s who don't come to clns:.." she said. NIC. " orm11lly these would be the s1u''Here. instructors a.nd srudents arc dents rccci\ring the Fs." more on a one-to-one basis... he said. Johnson sJid that before adding the " But I think (instructors) are more ,..,j1hdr:1wal students. the GPA for her a-.. ore now about the (oeed 10 lo,..er classes w:1s 2.4-1. After adding the GPAsl and will think more about !he students. the GPA dropped to I 75. gr:1des they give:· he added. Her solution to the problem was not

Events, BBQ end festivities NlC's Campus Daze festhitics concluded Frida). April JO. with intr.1mural competitions to compete in or observe bcrwccn courses of free barbequcd roast beef sandwiches. The barbcque. which .,.-as sen•ed by the SUB's kitchen ere". fed appro:rim3tely 500 people. . . In the men's 1ug-.>-war. the u;-inning team "''11~ ~nrle up of Bill ~am. Roecr Pruczins.lti. Kyle Willers. Ed Roh. Greg Espe Md Bnan Kruse. _The wmners o~ ~e women's competition were Jane Jeffries. Robyn CalC3tm;)I, Jodi Calcaterra. Nickie Deffenbaugh and Lisa Davies. The most accurate frisbee thrower was Michele Heller. and Kurt Leonard threw a frisbce the fanhes1. Calvin De Haas tossed :1n cm pry beer teg farther than any hi~ competition. and the winner of the softball throw was Cheryle Layson. The WU1D111g terun of empt)' beer can throwers was comprised of Robyn CaJe3tcrra. Jodi Calcaterra. Mark Allen and Pat Payton.

or

Barry Baker photo

THREE WHEELED BED?- The Auto Machinists of NtC show th..lr ablUllc, In making beds as well as r&ei ng them. The machinists p ~ SttOnd 10 the Auto Mechanics April 27. Mark Lewis 1[11lde1 the bed u C~gg OuclOI, Mike Clemon, and Tom Fike push. Alvu, Carpenter Wis after e.1cban'1flg p1- with Dudot.

Student insurance policy offers myriad of· benefits by Paul Baler In addition lO a part-time doctor and a full-time nur..e. NIC students who C3rry 10 or more credits also automa1icalh ha,e the benefit of a student ilti~rance policy. The cost of the coverage. which is taken out of general student fees . is S41. One dollar is used 10 pay for the services of Dr. R.H. Eggleston, and S4 0 goes directly 10 the in<;urance compan~· in Bobe. Benefi ts become effective when tuition is paid. They continue through· out ,he summer for ~tudcn t~ re~i~tercd for spnng semester and cover the student at school. home or while lrG\·eling. The policy ,..ill not cover the fir:st ,•isit to a doctor, but a visit 10 Dr EggleSton. who i:, available Monday throu.u, Fnda, from 7:30 to 8:.30 a.m. free of charge. will count as the iniual visit. For every subsequent v15i1. to a maximum of 50, the policy will pay SIO. According lO Joanne Marioov1ch, student hca.lth nurse. ,n:u,y s1uden1s are un.1warc of the bcalth ca re a"ailable on campus and c:onscqucndy of the student health plan. Marinovich is available Monday through Frida)' from -:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. 10 hillldle any medical problems or questions on insurance. Les Hogan. dca.n of scudcnlS. said that the biggest problem with the

insur:mce is thnt the earner is in Boi~e. so II sometimes takes more time for form\ 10 get processed. Marinovkh said thn1 ofter checking into what other schools pay . she believes that NIC 1s gelling the best dc3J for che price. "Several claims have p:11d up 10 SJ,000 10 S4.000 for severe illnesses.'' Mnrinovich ~aid. The insur.ince will nol cover :iny pre-existing conditions. and students can get their dependents insured by filling out an optional enrollment form. The insurance plan "'ill pay 80 percent of expe nse~ incurred over SI ,000 but not exceeding S7.SOO for any one accident or s1ckncs~. Student insurance also provides: --:1 S2.000 nccidentol death bcne· fit. --up to S250 for injury LO sound n:1tural teeth and a maximum of S25 for impacted or abccssed teeth. --S 15 per chiropractic: treatment. - - 3 maximum of SIOO {or X-rays. l~b 1ests 2nd emergency room viS11S, --a S250 muimum benefit for a pregnancy that commences ~bile the policy is in force. and II m11..11mum of S150 for a volunwy abortion. --a S95 additional pregnancy opuon. Detailed insurance pamphlets arc available from Joanne Marioovich upstairs in the SUB.


May 7, 1982/ Canilnal Review .5.

r~_a_r_t_s_le_n_t_e_r_t_a_in_m _ e_n_t_ J Musical revue to he May 14-15 The NIC Drama and Music departments will present a musical revue Friday, May 14 and Saturdav. May IS in the Communication-Arts Auditorium at 8 p.m. The revue will present songs of Stephen Sondheim. "Side by Side by Sondheim.'' It ,.,ilJ include songs from Sondheim"s Broadway shows intluding. "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way 10 the Forum." "West Side Story," " A Little Night Music." "Do I Hear a Waltz"' and "Gypsy." The show will be directed by Robert E. Moe, NIC theater director. with Rick Frost and Michael Bulle) dirccung the music and playing duo pianos. NIC freshman Jeffrey UlOnardi will be appearing in the show along with local re\idents Kathy Mans. Lynnette Spur. Rex Dolg_ner nnd Karen Moe. Admission will be S4 for adults, S2 for cltildren and senior citizens, and no charge will be given to NIC ~tudents. focuhy and staff.

Choral celebration slated Sunday The Nonh ldhno Colle~e Choir and CDA Chamber Chorale will present a spring chor:il cclcbrnuon Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Communication-Arts Auduorium TI,c program will feature an am1y of choral music of all ages including classical pieces. mndrigab, voe.ii Jau. barbershop. folk songs and Gilben and Sullivan. The program will al~ highlight the Madriga l Singer~ m c,riginal costume. the \Uunds of the Cardinal Chorale and the Men's Barbcl"lhop quanet. 1 ickcts uc on sale 01 Burt's MuMc and Sound , the Chamber of Commerce and the Communicauon-Ans office of NIC (667-6331). Adm1$sion is S2 11nd SI for c;tudcnt or child. Community Conccn and Senior Cicuen card, will be lu,norcd.

Up the arts

[11

Sci-Ji same old story by Bruet1 P~gc1 Walkmg through the overage lie1lon section of the overnge bookstore con be A hiunrdous proposition these d11y). Dangers such ns black holes. losers, time worp~. dragons, mnglc spells and similar arcane 1r:1ps abound. Such hazards ore detectable, however. Looi: for them undt'r the ,1gns 1h01 \3)' "science fiction" nnd ··science fonU1S)' " It Is. unfonunatcly, nn axiom of llternture thnt populant:y breeds predic1nbilhy. I think I would 8"'e n week's pay to ;,cc a new high-1cc:h gadget. magic item or spell in n story. Plots seem to hove become ns mo~s-produciblc t1s the gadgets. The plot~ of most current fanU1Sy nnd science flttion stones s~m to b:t\C been bnscd on SC!>i.tons of Dungeons nnd Dragons of Gamma World (D&D a In Buck Rogers). This is not to amply 1h,u sci-Ii and fantasy nrc bnm'n on fonns. Sometimes an author co.n toke n sc1cn t1fk theon• and, from c:ireful research. write ;in interesting story detaihng the possible r.imilications of the theory. "Silent Spring" is probably the best modem eumple of the w.e of this technique. Ho"ever. chis nppronch is bcftcr for molJng :1 stand on a current issue thnn 11 is for milking enduring literature. Enduring li1cr111urc con nho be found m the sci-Ii :ind Camas,· racks "198'.'," " Brave Ne" World" 11nd other neg:111\·c u1opU1S cleorl~· qualify as ~nenec fiction. as does, for exnmple, " \ Canticle for l eibou1u." During convocauons it w:i\ brought up repeated!) th3t people giHi me3n1n_g 10 tec~nolo&), and no, ,·ice-\ crsa. Thi~ pnnetplc an be U5ed 10 determine the hterary v:lluc or n sci-Ii or fontas, work. MoYe the )Con 10 1hc 20th century, give the characters 20th ~t~ry technology tno m:ig1c a.llowcd) and see w hethcr the stol) reuun, us meaning. a.s do the :ibo\ e htlcs. Movit's lhnt base their 1,-onh on specu1I effects arc sh;iUow. and bool..s that do so are won.e: you don't even get the (O}Orful pictures.

Ceramics invitational tops area entertainment Usting by Jackle Appel Cheney Cowles Memorial Museum. in cooperation with E:istem Washington University's An Depanment ...;11 presenc an AIi Ooy National Ceramic lmi t3tional April 29 through Ma} JO The museum, West 2316 First. Spokane. will be presenting IS professionally recognized artists panicipacing in the all cloy imiwional. The following movies will be showing at local theaters. Wilm3: "Beach Girls" at - and 9 p.m. --Coeur d' Alene Drive-In: " Body Guard"' and "Taps." The gate opens at p.m. --Coeur d'Alene Cinemas: '"Chariots of Fire," at S. 7 and 9 p.m.: "The Sword and the Sorcerer" (reviewed in this issue) :11 5:15. 7:IS and 9:JS p.m. an d "Poriy's" at 5:30• .,:JO and 9:30. - - Showboa1 Ill Tn·Cinem:i: "The Amateur" at 7:JO and 9:30 and "Paradise" at - :IS and 9:15.

(___s_c_re_e_n_s_c_e_n_e_____J 'Sorcerer' scrapes bottom using same old plot line b} Joseph Gr7J11cr

Had the plot of "The s.. ord .llld the Sorcerer·· been .. n nen b,· a sc,enth gr:ider, I .. ould u ~ it is a prem· good movie Whal this dime-a-dozen flick offers an the ,. a,· of th.rills. excitement and special e·rrects, it cancels v.itb a distinct l:ick or inugination and ori· ginalit)' in the sto!). The title is a clear indication of wlut I me:i.n. The term "~'Ord and sorccr," refers 10 a geore of lmsgin:itM: ficuon some.. tw related 10 science licuon. To mue such a film and call 11 "The s..-ord llnd the Sorcerer" is 10 ~UCX\lmb 10 ~bongiiw dicbcs. lm.aginc ll mO\ie enutled "The Gothic Roman· tics." For lhose v. ho denve pleasure from a lot of nd1C'lllously unnecessary gore in the theaters. "Swords·· 1s no disnppoinunent. But the banle scenes, 3S .... en as the gruewlllt' innsformauons of the sorttrcr, Xusl:a. v.ould seem to tu,-c sufficient imp:ict 1utbou1

the ruthless!) ugly 1rc:11men1 in this film. It is as though Disneyland hod gone mad. To be fair. there 11rc a few good pomts that an be mentioned. The role of the hero. a reluctant yet firmly capable wnrrior named T3lon, is pulled off pre tty well in the tradition of H3rrison Ford. (Ford is not in the mo\ie. though he would have done the role justice. A po rt in this flick. howe~er, would have done him no JUSriCC ) A crew of clumsy villains w~th desen robes and scimi111 rs provide some comic relief: and in one morbid yec stIJngely amusing scene a new twist is g1vea to the old ndage. " Keep your DDSC to the grindstone." Ycl for all of the swashbuckling adventure 1n this tale of good versus ('\.ii. n is tme . . . pllinfully trite. Perhaps the producers will mend some or their sensa11on:1l yet dread fully generic ""*Y$ 10 the promised (or thrutened!) sequel.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • I• • • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

:~ ...-n~waciATN li H, wa~ 95, 3 miles N o t 1-90 Coeur d' Alene

?4-HOUR SHOW INFORMATION MATIN'EES EYE:RY SATURDAY AND SUNDAY NlC STUDB\"TTICKETS AVAILABLE FOR SI.SO PICK UP TICKETS CN SUB, VO-TECH OFFICE AND C-A OFFICE

_

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_.-;I


l\lay 7, 1982/Card.lnal Review -6-

...

Read y to sail A long llnc or NlC student.I walt ID h4! lei aboard the Mlsb·&n·nock for 1M

lhn:e-boor cruise held Aprll U.

Brenda Murphy p

olD

Coeur d'Alene judge gives gavel to president by Laura Hubbard

A very spcciaJ gavel was prcsen1cd to ASNIC President Jim Brewer at a

recent student bo.11rd meeting. The gavel, which was gh•cn 10 Brewer ond all future ASN IC presidents by Judge Virginia Balser. was made by o friend of Ba.Jser's u.ho was mute and had only one nnn. The man who made the g:Hel. George H. Higgens, wos formerly a cou n mnrshall In Minnesota and mo,•ed to Coeur d · Alene after he retired. He mnde the gavel gh·cn to Brewer and three other ga,els for Bnlse r at the request of the judge's husbnnd. According 10 Balser, only one of the Silt courtrooms at the counhouse has a ga,cl in ii. and they are seldom used. Most of the room on the benches is taken up by paperwork, she said, and so far she has needed no more than a pencil tap to silence persons in rourt. "It (the gavel) is 100 h:rndy a weapon. That" s one of the rcnsons I don't like them:· she said.

Besides she addeo. the flllgs. blllCk robe and other symbols of authority in the court rooms art enough ID "strike tcrl"Qr in the beans of men."' ·1 am glad that one of them (the g:i,elsl get used. I ""ould bate to see an) thing t.lw be I Higgens) made not get u!>ed bec:iase he "as such a wonderful person.·· she said. "He u.ould put you to shame u.·ith bis amstl)."' Bl1l\er said that Higgens was ,•ery hirndy with a lntbe aod that he often made artful items for fnends at only the cost of the mat ·ri:ili needed to construe( them. "I reaJly don't think George thought · he h3d 3 handicap." she said. '"I don't think I t'\'er went to his house th111 I didn't carry something off with me when I left."' Breu.er said it "iii be rucc to h.ive something in Lhe srudent government thnt can be passed down as a son of lcg;icy.

Language festival schedukd today NlC "111 host the annul1l Nonh ldabo LanguJ1ge FestivaJ today on aunpus from 10 n.m. to 2 p.m. Foreign language smdentS from area high schools will :mend the seminar th3t includes scheduled showings of three foreign films in German, Spanish and French. (Sec notices. page 16.) The fcstiva.l. which is organized by the Panhandle Association of Foreign 1.3ngungc Teachers (PAFtn. begins with a reception in the Bonner Room of the SUB that includes cookies, pastries and liquid re(tt'Shments. Following the reception will be skits or songs from e3ch school 111 10:30 a.m .. lunch 111 11 :30 11.m. and the film showings at 12:15 p.m. NlC students are invited to participate in the festivities 3'Dd can get more informal ion from Josee Giese n at the language lab in Room 30 of t.he Administration Building.

Paul Baler photo

AS1'11C President J im Bre wer accepts a hand-made ga, el from Judge Virginia Balser. The gavel " ill be used by Brewer and future ASNTC presidents.

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May 7, 1982/ Cardlnal R.e,·iew -7-

CR Poetry Insert Student poems from Fay Wright's

English 292 class Poems by: P'Tric ia lrelond

Untitled Far away on some dlstanl day once before a time . • • t"l')'Jlal chlmcs sprinkled ilmes In fcr1Jle !IOII

blatk eternal Oclds dJstan1 d reams In apple blonom frag,ance a gawy a

seed

P oe ms b y: Cindy Da hlstrom

FOR EMILY She slallds alone In a theatre suiteves dn and all ln white. The pid.:c is fonclng 001 the world E.rplsin her garden D.lgh1 . l 'n1Jiled, she "rite~ hidden, \\ lib o lo,tr's fable to 1eU. Throllgb 1recs Md Dowers she slllmbles Ou her tolenuu joom e) 1hroug h Bell.

erupts

BE IT: IT IS SO! F,nough, lf from our s 1lr born minds we come 10 crcarc lush reallly from quiet plclured fantas.\ Throuah Lo,·e . Through llol)(' and Fa.l ib We come to know and no1 ~Ue,•e We arc greater, grcal<'r, grcalcr from newborn thoughts, once called fantasy

DESERT DEATH After stumbling In tbt hoiugl.us, blown-dn sand has the taste of spring';.'&ter to a burn1 longoe. When ,,eed·lhln from the sun , no sm.lie a,·oids the grey shade

or. NM:k-

or a pebble. The banard 's sllhooete t'lrdes, 1mo.. 1ng nun a dud hope. All ls sand- am! ) ti, the sunset conlradlcts.

NOON R USH

SWISH WISH b, Fra nk KeUer

Weak tea colored taste China l'OSe cup lea, cs left In hone) 5) nip drcg1. A quarter for th<' waitress In a bu:ndn,d rose cup.

clanklng and sha~rlng In the tea re.de.r's clJahwaahu At noon nub.

Roand leather lo b.and Beneath the shadowy lights Brings nolse from the s tands


May 7, 1982/Cardhw Review -8-

Poem s by: Frank Keller

ALMOST TROCHAIC SPRING Su.nshl11e-1 Sllnsbi.oe wh~ ba,e you gone! Momlng, l't1omlng wlth oo bright dawn Raindrop,, Raindrops Soowfl.alres WI doW11. Doa' t yoo goJ-s know Spring 1w hit town.

Poe ms b y: Borry Boker

. EMULATING e.e. cummings IJI hfm. poetry whea the l)Ag<' Is sweeter as the wonh of an llllterale epk man writes Uttle not big

CELESTIAL NOMAD

and stevensandwlll.l.ams come running Crom writings and readings and H's poetry when the page l.11 neatly scribbled

I like Lo Ue upon my bed to stare at a dosing celling.

the enormous

Sometimes I shot my eyes a.ad ~e.trau'

old cplcman writes Uttle nc,.er big

deep Into tbclr dooni where tn.vellng through space by stars ls effortless.

from desks and offices 1111d

Bot I sense a beyondness, 1111 ending ttalm, a.ad while a.p proaeblng this uncertalncy m) bed i>c(omcs cle-cme and m) unconsdo45. con5Cloas.

It's thea I wonder ,,,h~r oae da3, oae Joa:rne}, I may IU.Ch an cad or a.a l.a!lnlte llfe between gJ1UJdstands o! stars.

and dkldruooandmlllay come prancing

It's poetry

and the

llghc•rootcd epkman

writes

Uttle

ae,er big

JAMES TATE Be a_ever knc" half or his mold: the ODC or !WO

tbac Oew. Tbc soa of a sun circler, a

Lost Pilot la words. Missouri bom, a dnfter with a, is.tors blood a.ad Dying style OD th.In wood, As la sl.')' mmbUng

REFLECTION There's a JJnc thai follows another. Places they combine to form each other. Places they s tan together they On.Ls.h. As the one belag an echo or the other .

foWld

tele,1sloas a.ad starlings 0yl.ng high In chlldrea •s , lsloas. Looking at life Inside 001, belag a fish, bathlag la blrd ba.l hs, attendlag the opera with rattlesuu:es.

A man or many laces, a park bwn. rum drunk, that's yoo James Tate.

THANKS TO BLAKE To see a word oa • page And a poem OD a ICrOll Bold deootalloo I.a ,a opeD cage Aad coaotatloa under a bowl.


May 7, 1982/ CvdlnaJ Review .9.

Poems by: Miles La ne

Poe ms by: Luella Wuest

Untitled

Untitled Poe rn11 by: Cra ig John son

BEGINNING WINTER lt WU a begln.n lng winter:

Sining I.a a cli.alr llsteolng IO the echoes boUllce off the wall, hitting me as they transmit IO the

receiver. There ls small talk, Lt.hie talk. idle talk, and big talk.

welts of old snow 5Plotched the mottled cape

like a checked leper; buried In ba:rrows g,oundhogs waddled to wum; frost often Iced on depression; the slow,sUp of ld cles drip In the dull light of dawn; now no blrd sings, S-Ong of hawk and flncli long slnce had lcf1

There ls chat, chit cbaL, iattlc and gossip. There is advice, prh'llle convc,sallon , and social repartee.

Some shoot the brene or go inlo a huddle. Others chew the rag.

branch and fence

Untitkd

only sno·w-c:apped smmps s trewn at slat.k late~als punclu.lc the forest.

Some g.1,·c speeches,

llladi Quttn mccta Wblte King.

and some gh c lectures, " bUe others spread rumors.

Oiecbiate. E,e,ybody wlns.

All in all, ll's just talk.

Untirled

tONG & DANCER

Onre remembered dreamll December's dread, [ro~I on the lea, es Lhc cold sheets of a bed.

f1y, pldcet,fencc-tonL'Cl•fcc11 tread l1lf I~ I.h at 0Dl'C )1111.ed my daddy'• dad to lhe lihlp••• aod tb co Al'rOfi that thin, pink Up lha1 burned lor • bod) lumped , and plumped, A belly bulged, bu uoncd bright II I

lll'C -

l'1llitled Poem, lll'C podeo of feellngs through "hlcb chlldrco search for and).

black bab) 'Ii

h i I can ,hake a Ot To make a coal bean bum 111d my , oll'C Is llke 10 crack plate glas~.

So watch me break

"''Y bl.got'&bind, scream acroi,11

d&ht bu,·en's IU't',

and wall for the Midnight Cod to &h·e me talom. I woa •1 think,

ll'lcue... No, God!J llatt the flame,Orc-aJcam below their dancing !rt. blue eyes Clllalcl be the Pme one to melt m) cbocola.te heart. I wW DOI forgive. l'U clllp their false to,-c out, 11111 bate them when "e pan.

Untitled Looking al 11 , lcw through d11U grey

diamonds, shadowed

'Wit hed b) hunger la lht dart(, and

'4ocbed. , , by fon!lgn SW$. No1 "'bite a)Utcr.

Some att Lntupretc rs and some are Lnterloculors.

TO STOP A RIVER To Uop a riH r , squlnt J our e) cs Into s:nake, slither the rlm peripberal , islo.n a.nd "aJcb the whlle foam ~ c

or

on .Iate-£Ucl. back!. o( oc" bom elepbanl ca.hes Crunk lo !all 10 lrunl. then each "hort of " bl1e.. 11er, each concuplsccn I spra> dropping In dlrz) prttlslo_o " Ill C'O me 10 Corm a CrlC"Ze. (Wben )OU stop a rhcr "ho l.no"-s " ha1 ) ou might see.)

.. 1th haze,> grey clouds, the ., ,Her mo,cs east. rdlectlng all the JVe> Crom the dlamond, aad the sk).

In the co, e, the clov,h hang Lbdr

mhl) co~crs o,er the mounw.ns aod softl) Ile on lhe "•ter.

The poll$ SI.and 11 anentloo as the cool winds brush the

" ater by.


I

May 7, 1982/ Ca.rdinaJ Riw lew

.Jo.

Poems by: Terri Benzon

HAIKU

LOST SOUL

Up th.roctgb the water bursl tbe rainbow fish with fue colors In the air.

I am tnpped In endless •old

Stttt teeth griping and sinking Into tbe f11rthct1 reaches

Po ems by: Brian Odegaard

OF SPRING The 6tlow mclls slowly over the earth. Soon will cou... the green birth or spring. II Sttms lllce the dawn the new awakenlng a.nd It sends me back to days before the hardness In m,· beart seoc me In search · o( spring.

Untitled A plcrure oJ ) ou

lo help me remember thst windy momlog In early Sepcember. We can't ha, e each otbcr I must admit that Is true so thanks aga.ln for seod1ng a pictwc of ) OU.

No end 10 this bleak nothingness no Ught everything gray dark cloudedI am radlalJng numbness my thougblll go blank

easUy I forget •.. I know not where

I am annot uodcn1r.aod whywhat brought me here did r do someOilng wronR-

ROOT BEER .CELLAR

I am cold alone with no bome-

It w~ • very pleasant ecllu. Its Door sticky Crom sugar and always the old woman stirring ber dry·lced br e"· i.be steam griodln.g upwards lO the bright ctpper "1odo,; s where the cblldreo grasped the smell and II was good in anticipation.

of my 801llTberc a.re no other 10Ul1 only mlnc DO hope of f,ulon a mate belpcverythlng 11 bla_ned Ukc a window wben 11 rainsI aee no t'aca dearly. jll8t 1.m udges all vol~ and sounds muIDcd ccboo!lthcrc It no sharp movement only g10galnet1!1 denMl heary s lowmotlon senulJon-

lbeTC Is a.n aching emtJnaa

Untitled Time heals oo wounds oo or about the bead se, en times lrled se, en time$ mlslea.d. Fortunes Crom Came burning the soul talks Crom the money ~ and otben we owe. Mirrors sho" the eeilln.g shock in the arm feelings are mutual no others "e harm.

a longlng; need for warmth Ught vividness peace [sense?) a comfor1Jng; [REA1JTY?}-

esc:ape bUufulness or StaJ1 o, er be born aga.ln'! IA>


May 7, 1982/Canllnal Review -11-

thinclads ('---_c_r__;;.p_o_r_ts s ___J Record-laden primed for regionals by Brace Mullen National qualifie~ Christy Da,ids and Rhea Karnes will lead a pad: of 20 Cardinal trackst= into Eugene, Ore.. today and Saturday for lhe NJCAA Region 18 Tr:ick and Field Champion, ships :ind a shot at qualifying for nationals. Davids has qualified in the 5.000 meters along v.·11h sophomore Mike Friess, and Karnes h.is qualified in both the shot put and the discus. Da,·ids qualified with a school record time of 14:51 7 in the 5.000. and he also se1 s school mark in the 1,500 (.3:56.-l ) 10 make regionals in that event Karnes :i.lso nailed down ii school record in the discus. and her toss of 134' 2" is 1hc best 1n Region 18 this year. Ray Milks benercd his 0"'11 school mark in the hammer v.ith a 147' 9" throw, which qualified hun for both regionals and nationals. Weightmen lim Taylor and Vince Currin arc also qualified for the regional meet. Taylor v.ill compete in lhe discus, and Curtin v.ill thro"' both the discus and the shot. Five Cardiiul~ will ~ an the high jump-Alex Flores. Ken Capaul Abn Wordsv.orth, Heather Binkley nnd Rounc Hansen The onl} o:her Cardm:11 qu.alified an a field e,·cnt 1~ long jumper Eddie Goodson. who also is runntng the 100and 200.meicr sprints.

For 1he Indies, J3nicc Edgar is running the 100 and 200. 3nd Jann Chell) is in 1he 100. The middle d1S1:,ncc even1s appear to hold lhe brightest hopes for Cud victories. The -100 meters has Amy Albrigh1 :ind Mike Hard.i"·ar. :ind the 800 is loaded "ith Jesse Gore. Davids, Hard3wa,· and Kelh· Woods. Woods.serthe school IDllrk May I in 1be 800 v.i1h a 2:22.5 docking n1 a mec1 in T3coma Joe AJv.11rd and Suzie Maxwell ,..ill JOtn Oa,·ids in running the 1,500 meters. and Don Manin will 1rv the 3.000-mcier steeplechase. · Fhe rela, teams nlso recorded school records 1his spring. with the men·~ team setting th ree nnd the 1,omen two. Gore. Hnrd:l\\ay. Davids nnd Jerry Arledge r:in ~:-16.97 in the 4x800 relay, 3nd Friess nnd Alv.·ard joined Gore and Davids in the -!xi ,c,00 relny io clock 17:19.

The sprint medley relay mark fell 10 3:36.84. \\ith Goodson. Scon Frame. Alward nod Flores providing the leg work. Maxwell. Cherry, Albright nod Woods lowered the <lx400 record 10 4:16.2, nnd Edgar replaced Cherry to help the other 1hrcc set nno1her mark m the distance medley. Uniortunntel,. the -Ix LOO nnd •l x-100 arc the onh reinvs that will be run 31 region:il~. ·

Bruce Mallen phot.o

S-T-R-E-T-C-H- -Beathcr Binkley reaches for the nnd pie In long Jamp compctltfon Ma) LaJ T-IDL Blnldc) allO ran the 100 met«s and competed Lo the blah Jwnp, bat w will Onl) ~orm Lo tbc hlgb Jwnp th.ls "ctlend "hen the Cardinals travel Co Euaeoe, Ore., for the NJCAA Region 18 tracli and Ocld chaaiploaAJi-, Binkley and 19 otben will be compcllng for a dlot at naUo:nals Lo Saa Anaelo, Ten,,

CONCENTRATION- -Rhea Karns takes plen1y of clme co prepare befo re unleashing the shoe In last Saturday's mceL


Ma) 7, 1982/Cardinal Review -12-

TVCC first league foe for Card baseballers by Bany Baker

Choc kino rd ,,. ~b')\·a . Fre~bman Jeoole Mutln s ends the Ja, ello spiraling lb:rough lhe air al lhc ~la) I Tacoma u,mmonll' Ccllege ln~lwlon.al.

Bruce Mullen pboio

r

[I]

greg lytle

Meanwhile at the top Occasionolly, it is interesting to tnke a moment to look at some of the more unusual developments in the sponing world. This spring. the uousuol nearly became the likely as a host of surprises surfaced in varying capacities. There really is no plausible way in which to 01_1.agoriu oddities in nhlerics, so here is a r:indom sample of il few wb_ich have caught my interest in the past month. In pro golf. the unimaginable nearly happened when PGA rooltic Tom Pohl shocked the "orld with his second-place finish in the U.S. Masters tournament by losing a play-off to hefty Craig Stadler. The strike gave way lO the streak as the Atlanta Bra,·es led a pad: of teams with a new pro record of 13 wins in a row. An unknown Cz.ech named IVIIJ'I Lendl took the teOllis world by storm and in four months beat the former best men's singles player (John McEnroe) four times and pocketed S9-IO.OOO in prize mooey. The New Yori Islanders and Wa)11e Gretzky enjoyed their 0\\11 private reigns over the National Hockey League. with the Islanders continuing a dynasty and Gretzk) acclaimed as the all-time greatest pla}er. All be has to do no" is get meaner. Recruiting violations and college football seemed to go hand in hand last season with the most notable violator being the Uohersity of Southern Californi,a. who "'3S slapped "ith a three-year suspension for doling out just a little bit more than full scholarships to potential players. In the pros, fonncr world-class hurdler Renaldo Nehemiah hung up his spikes for t1 shot at wide receiver for the San Francisco 49ers and a much more lucrative vocation. Nehemiah auditioned for the Eagles earlier this year. and apparently he can catch. Ron J:iworslti. the Polish pistol, threw Rcru:lldo 45 bullets of varying lengths. 43 of which were handled v.ith sticky fingers.

With a seven-game wmnio!I streak toppled by a rash of inCOD£1Stency, NIC hctld baseball Coach J;ic); Bloxom prepares his team for a remedial team performance in the concluding )Q 2 SC:u-00. The ovcrnll record is 18- tJ. ond with 10 game,; left 1n the regular SC:l$0n of ola.-. Bhuom's Cnrdinols pla) their first league game todnJ . Tod:i\ and Saturdn} LC tr:ivcls co Trc~~urc \'allC\' Community College for a p,ur of doubleheader.. ,1ar1ing at 1 p.m. both days. la) 11. NIC will \"mt Fa<tcrn \\ ashmgtc,n JVs for 3 doublehe:ad!:'r The team "111 close ou1 the scn~on pl.:mni ho~• 10 TVCC for another pair of t\\in bilh M.iv 11 .ind IS. Region l!i "Ill hold 1t\ IQS2 toumn mcnt ·at either Rick<, or chc Cfllkgc of S.,uchcrn Idaho M:w 21 and 22 L1,;t ,car Ltnn-Bcnton up,rr Ur,,pqthl for the region ,ro,\n Team captain Lucl.y LJrson \tl!d the ,qutld h looking prCll) good. " I thmk v.e re going 111 lim,h with ,1 hellu~a \Cason." L3rson said. "Our good p11chc:r, will come along and pitch ;is good a, the)' ore able. Our rooku: p11cher:. don'1 realize the 1oum · t1ment pla~·s aftermath." la™>n sn1d that the regular season of play JUSt letlds up 10 the post•scoson pl;iy.

"lf "'e don't win there. we come home.·· he said. lnJurics hn\e pl:igued NIC all season Ion~. Ron Blasetti suffered torn tendons lo his knee and power hitter Stan Sawicki has been hompcrcd with n pulled homstr111g. ll m11ing h1~ plnymg time'. A couple of rotntor cuff lniuric~ rcqnctcd ploying time for fir-;t bu,e. n111n Ur'iOII nnd pitcher Rand> Hnll (.l· l. 1 snvc) FirM bn,emon R:ind, Mollett ho, bec:n bothered bv n sprained nnklc and c:itchcr On, 1d Thomp\On was hh 111 the mouth by ,1 b,111 hit in batting practice NIC', bots hov!:' not ,topped SllOI(· hli oppo"ng pitcher, o, the team·, leading hmcr. Darren Ta,•lor. hit o mplc.• ognin'il Yak1mn April 27 111 the b11t1Qm 11£ the eighth l.ucky L.,r~fln thcn ,ingled 1 nylor 1n for 1hc w1nn111g run. Olo~om ,witched Mcrhn Bunn:i~c ond Brian Bond~ oround in the inlield. Bunnogc 1~ now nt ~hort, top. 11nd Bond, moved over lo third. The} both agreed to the switching und would rnthrr piny ol their new rcspccuvc po~ilions. ·•1 feel more 01 home," Bunn;ige ~aid. He played 0 1 \ hon throughout his high school caree r nnd is more comfortable there.

2nd place goof

Men 's tennis team at regionals The NIC men's tennis team will be competing in the Region 18 toumomenl today and Saturday. and according to coach Ken Smith, the Cardinals have a good chance LO finish second over-all. Favored to win the Roseberg, Ore., tourney is Treasure VaJley Communicy College. which handed a 7-2 loss 10 NlC In the Cards' first match of the season. •· 1 think that we have o chance for some second place fintshers ... Smith said. "And I think we hove a good chance to finish second over-all." Smith also mentioned that NIC should do well in doubles competition, as they h.ove been emphasizing lb.at over singles in practice. The team of Mike Raymond and Steve Blakely will "be competitive." Smith said. The Cardinal women linished their season in fine form last weekend at the regional tournament , as two Cards made it into the finals and three were chosen for the six-member all-region team. Trish Boyle and Vid:i Brown were both beaten in the finals by Oack:amas Community College players. helping the Oregon school to the turn title. Dione Tipton. Boyle and Brown were aJI named to the all-region team.

Northwest Electronic Supply Company 102 Indio no Ave. Coeur d 'Alene (208) 666-2553 Monday-Thursday

8 o.m . to 5 p.m.

Wholesale Supplier of Electronic Parts . Components and Audio Accessories.


Ma.> 7, 1982/ CardinaJ Re, iew -130

A yea r of 1rop1c pons. sun and swimming in warm, sparkling lagoon.\ in the Sout.h P:IClfic lies in wait for NIC siudem Brenda Murph)·. Whar slim ed ou1 four }·ears ago 115 JUsl 3 dream is now ready 10 tum inlo a renhl) for the Murphy fa mil). Most people probabl} dream about

Murphy to sail Pacific

firs1 "eek of June. barring an~ un!orseen dela,·s. An iuneran fort.he year-long outmg includes such islands :is the \larquesa~. ,1he Socic:t} lsl:inds. SiUlloa, the Tong.is. Spi~ .ind Xe" Zeal3l!d. "here 1he~ will likely spend the _several mon1hs of lhe hurricane season. and probably lastly. the Ha..·aiian Islands. ··Dunng lhe long segments of lhe trip. we will all have to llllte ni.rns standing watch. lilcc three-hou r shifts."' Murphy said. Preparations for a trip of this magniiudc are iremendous. for lbe pasl several "eeks the Murphys' boa1. AmeriC3n Flyer. !us been undergoing some maJor remodeling in preparation for 1he tnp. ··we cut the "hole deck off and raised it nine inches and a1 1he same 1ime raised lhe noor of the C3bin sc,·en mchcs 10 provide morl' storage space and "ater tank5,"' she said. "We bough1 our boat in Ponland in January 1oso and ha\'e bee.1 sailing tt here on Coeur d'Alene Lake getting used to it." Murphy said.

bySwi Hall

Brenda Murphy ~pending time in the South Pacific hardly imagini ng the freedom of sailing nrou nd " herevcr 1he will beckons wlrh no ume1ables or deadline, . Bur for the Mu:rph)S lhls ..~11 be 11 drea m come rrue s1nr11ng around t.he

The first leg of !heir uip will be a shakedown crui~ from Se:m!c 10 San Francisco, where they wiU stock up for the appro11ma1el, 3.600 mile treck to the Marquei.as Islands, members of the Tuamotu Archipelago \\h1ch are under French control Prior to 1hls cnk rprfsc the Murphys gai:ied ocean sailing experience t,~ chancring sailboui. t.bree umes in the San Juaos and once in the \'irgin Island\. Fi,·e people are scheduled 10 be on board the -10 foot boat -Brenda· s

father. Loren. her mother, Grorgi3. her sister, Sophie and Brend3's bo\'friend. Tom Fullon. "The hardest thmg will be gefling along t ,;i1h e.ich other! confined in ~uch a small space." Brenda said. Also. along for the ride will be some equipment for that jus1-m-case umc. lots of first aid equipment. 1ools and emergency gear including Jn Avon emergency life r.ift and a fi,·e-man Zoo.iac inna1able boat ...,th motor. for fe~1ng people and supplies to and from cenain pon ,;. "Some of !he islands don't gei many nsitors so 11 is 3 big thing "hen <omcone comes 10 1heir island. "Some people from Port land recently took a similar cruise and hnve been telling us 10 Clll dog mea1 at lc:1.St at one of lhcse ou1-of-the-way stops,·· Murphy said. Many dangers musl be an1kip1lled "'hen considenng such on et"pedirion. The greatest of 1hcse arc storms at sea ~nd coral heads 1h:11 lie jusr benc111h 1he surface of the "ater and arc most common around islands and atolls. she added. An) such fear "111 surely be pu t 10 rest "hen hiking around 1he islands or di,mg and taking underwater pictures of the tropical plants and fish. pro,•idmg the) ace no1 sharks. she said. Brenda 1, rhc only member of the ~" 1hat is a rcgist~rcd scuba diver. At 1his time Brenda has made: no plans abou1 her fu ture :if1 er th e voyage. other thnn to " make some money for sure" perhaps by selling some of her photos and perhnps n story or two. Right no" she is just loo king forward 10 3 fun. exciring and safe trip fort.he ncn 12 to 1-l months.

Seven fresh,men appointed Cardi,ial Review e ditors Seven fre~hmen hn~c been nomcd to lil82-8J editorial pu)1t1on~ nf 1hc IC' DC'\\ lopapcr. the Cnrdinnl Re, ic" . Aetording to Adv1'Cr Tim Pilgrim. those who .. ,11 guide rh e paper neit >car nre Paul Baier. Mn rcl'llo Sanchez, S1an ll nll. Brul'C Mullen, Jjd1c: Appel, Ann Rauer and Florry Baler 801cr, n nBtl\ C of Monl..lto. Minn .. "111 lcad the i.taff \\hen he lll,SUmt'i. the dutielo ot cduor from Laura Hubbard, "ho will n1tc nd college :11 Arizona Staie Un" el"'lll\ in Tempe Sanchez, a graduat e of Llllc land High School In ROlhdrum, will serve b news editor, a position held by Bill Bradshaw. wh o will att end the University of ld11ho. Hall, who is from Kenai. Alaska, wilf sec double duties 115 photogrnph) cdnor and as associate editor . He replaces Coeur d'Alene graduate Brenda .Murphy, who is !uving with her family for a South Pacific CTUisc in

i.niltw111 \ ppel. a St Marie) gradU3te. "'ill abo )c:'C dl,uble du1~ ;u \he t~e~ o,cr the po,nionlo of an, .1nd entenammcnt cdn,,r 3nd ad\'C"1\mg manager She replace, Bru.-c- Padget. a Kellogg nativt' "h1> h ror11inuing h1i. rollegc )lUd, lit ISU, .ind Sharh·n Dinm;in. :i St. i 1nnes nnu,e. "ho ~ill ancnd the Un1,er.1t} of Alnl>ka m Anchorage .1

Mullt'n. 11 nall\e of PoM Falb, ..;n 1he •PQMs ediung duues from Greg L)IIC. a Coeur d'Alene gradu:1te. B:il.er. 11 WisconMn Studen1. \\ ill fill 1hc po~ttion or assiSt.in1 spo~ eduor. Rnuer. "'ho I) a resident or Sp1nt l.31.e. " ill be lhe CR copy editor. " This yeu's editors brought us 3 fi" e·s tar All· Americ11n raung." Pilgnm s11id. " I am hopeful 1h1u these nc:" editors " i ll be able to rono..- in the umc: mold." The editors will 3SSume their duties beginning with 1he first issue next fal l. ,l!.~ume

Brenda Murphy photo

TAKING OVER- Ne-.1) ap-polotcd CR editors ffrootJ Paul Baler, Barry Baker, M.aroella Sancbn., (bade! Jackie Ap~I, Bruce Mullen 1111d Ann Raner dl5cas• poulble ahel'UJldYes lo the paper's makevp. Not pictured la SIAD B.all, photo and associate edltor.


Ma) 7, 1981/ Ca.rdlnal Review -14·

Draft registration Moral obligation or military obsession? oe,.., a.nalysls by Joseph Gramer When I was growing up. the draf1 w;is an ongoing ract of life. I remember my p111ents, during 1hose uncertain days or lhe 1960s. discusst0g ,., ba1 might become of me ,.,heo l reached lhe ominous age of 18. Mo1her was in favor of roy gomg 10 Can3da. \\hilc Father nwnwned WI I would, of course. fulfill m) obhgauon co my country. I did not know what IQ ma.ke of n all. ln those days lhe possibilny of being drafted went hand in band with the threat of being sent 10 fight io Vietnam. There was no shon.age of the homir stories taking place in South· eas1 Asia--some of them could be seen on the eveoing oews. II was not long before the public outcry became monumental. Good iolentions and pa1rio1ic zeal were drowned in the mingled blood of those who went and the tears of those who stayed behind. It was understandable 1ha1 the draft became a highly emotional issue. With haunting fear I trembled at the gruesome powers greater than I. ever wondering what would happen should my number be drown someday. But, nlong v.·ith the United States· wilh· drnwal from Viclnam came an end to the government's polit')' of forced conscription. I was still only JS. Now, in my mid-20s. the proverbi:il sword is no longer suspended over my head. But n new generation of young men is now facing stepped-up regist nitioo. No wnr is in progress. buc what does it all mean? The drnfl was abolished in 1973. During his administration, former President Cnner re-acth•ated registra· tion when the So,,et Union invaded Afghanistan. This was an act of which man)· disapproved. Among the opposlog, olces was that of Ronald Reagan. During his campaign for the presidency. Reagan said that the droft. "destroys the ,·el') values chat ou r society is commined to defending.·· Severa.I months later. after he had senled into the White House. Reagan admined. "It's a dangerous world." and called for draft registration to continue. Under the existing arrangement for registration, the information which young men must supply to the Sdective Service System can be fur· nisbed to other governmem agencies as well-among them the Immigration and Nat uralization Service and the Federal Bureau of lnvestigation. Failure to comply with the system is punishable by "imprisonment for not more than five years or a fine of not more than Sl0.000 or both imprison· mcnt and fine." At the initial call to

register. appro~tely 25 percent of the eligible ms.les refused 10 sign up. lo a recen t lnlervle" , Michael Eichinger a Coeur d Alene Army Re~rve recnnter. said that the \'OIUD· wy sen,c:e is 'Q,orklng well at this nme It a.ssw-a higher ~ I I } person· nel. Eich111ger said. and aJIO\"s Uncle Sa.m to be more ~lcctr.e. hC\ertheless. Eidun~ said that compulsory semc:e is thcoreucall) a good tht0g. As an ex~mple. Eichinger cited Israel . .,here 311 citi:~s ~e a miliU!} 1erm and a.re t0 the resen ~ for the rest of their liv~. ''Scm.ing our country is the le11St we can do as ind.J,'idual. free people.·· he said. Ec:hiuger added that draft regtstra· tion is necessary in the event of total combat. Tlus is so that a\'3dable men can be called to "when e11sting forces and reserves a.re exhausted."' Ekblngcr sald thal be felt lhe chances of 211other v. .ir in the nC4C future :ire ··niJ... After Vietnam. he said. Amene:a has learned her lesson. Man} hope tbllt Eiclunger 1s right and tha1 the present reg1Stration is SLmpl) 2 precaution. Sce.,.art Alsop ~d in a Newsweek ed1tonal that appeued on Christmas 011y of 19-:?. 'The American system or milicatJ recruitment. as it developed during the invol\'ement in Vietnam. bas been just about the most unfair and divisive such system ever devise11 b)· the band of man." There are some. though. that be· lieve that the current registration may well be a prelude co war. NIC sociology instructor David Cohen said lhat it is not io the le3.St a bapb:uard strategy. " It ldttft registration] Is In keeping with the current administration's mili· tarisric designs." Cohen said. But what about students who are direct!) affected by the registration? What are their feelings about being possible candidates for a draft? Miles Lane. n 21-year-old student :ind member of the Babai faith. said that the draft is neither moral oor immoral. Lane bates the idea of ltilling but thinks it is sometimes necessary for collective securit)'. He does not believe in wasteful violence but said t.hat he would stand behind his government. "I don't like meddling io politics," Lane said. ··J might ask for non· combat status. but I wouldn't skip out. I don't see myself as a rebel." Rldwd Kuck, L9, understa.ocb the political motives for registration but does not personally approve of n draft because it v.'Ould be of little use in a modem war. "Ground troops don't make :any

dlfferencc now." Kuck said. "ICBM,; do." Ultimately it is the nucleilt' "capons bchtnd the lines that would be the deciding fac.-tor DO\\. Kuck s:aid. ;ind the1 cannot draft specialists to operate them. Kuck s111d, too. that the registration dtSCnmin3tcs Ag111nst men bet,_.ccn ages 18 and 21. Everyone. male 11.nd female. between the ciges of 18 ond 60 should be registered. Kuck snid. because it would defer ii drart if congressmen themselves were affec· !ed. Wbco asked "'hat be would do were he ever drafted for a "ilr, Kuck sold. " It would depend on \\hat brunch of the serv1ce I was drafted intu. tr it wns the Arm)'. I'd head for Cannda. If they JUSI wa.nted me to be a. grunt on the front lines, I wouldn't ~tick around."' Lfthe men were really needed. K.uck said, it would be nnc. Bui for a waste of potentio.l. no. However. the majority of draft-age

h:we claimed would be another Viet• nam? ··wen. we·d still be fighting the snmc thing:· Bush sa,d, "commu•

nism:· Chris PcllB, a JO.ycor,old student

who spen t 10 yeors in the Navy, spoke about the 1, illingnci.s th111 so many young men show to register. " I think the kids todny ore more conservotive:· Pella sold. "Al~o. they weren't there for Victnnm." Pella added that the llkellhood of 3 wnr Is not too grent now, so it doc\ not hurt to register. "But 1f they ,1ar1 ~ending 10.000 guys n week to El Salvador. it might be 1.1 different story." he soid. Jim McColloch, 42 and also a 10-yenr vctcmn of the Nn,•y. was very blunt In hb viewpoint. " I say th ey should ~1nrt the draft llge at 40. · · McColloch ~Gld. '"That would 6hokc up those congressme n. It ·~ eo.sy for o roomful of guys in their 40~. whose sons nrc at Horvard and Yole and won 't hove to go anyway. to draft tho~c kids. I say the drnft age should ~tort at 40." The qu estio ns s urrounding draft rcgistm1ioo Brc almost llmitle!S. Is it right •.. or wrong? ls the government octing in the best Interests of the cou ntry? Or i~ it, as Reag:in said on a more condescending day. o threat 10 the values we hope lo defend? Is it a necessary political ploy? Is it n moral issue, calling for individuals to search thei r own heans? There arc no simple answers.

41

- -\\••:-As A. 1AM.B "'T"'fJ -r ~ E. sLAUGi~r~."

,,, Ii><' J.J men interviewed expressed a v.ilJingness to go along with the decisions of the government. For ex.ample, OinlQn Bush. also 19 years of age, said tbac the voluntary service is not working and that regismltion is fine with bim. Sappo•e that the United Statet became involved mill.w ily in El Salva· dor-a potential siruation which mllly

::r~tAH

In September of )979. an article entitled. ' 'Games Nations Pby" ap· peared in Saturday Review. With reference IQ lhe Vietna.m era. the writer s aid, " We should have lea rned from our experience tha t Americans arc not poker chips to be used in the in tern atio nal game of posturing and blustering desi.gned to maintain a balance of power.'


-

May 7, 1982/ Canlinal Review -15-

Probabk herbicide use causes public to worry by Ann Rauer &lltor's oole: Tbls Is tM third lo a three-part series on I.be problems of Agent Ora.age. Many people do not know wh:u Agent Orange is. but the majority of lhem do not want this chemical. or any chemicals. sprayed on the Idaho Panhandle. according ,to a recent survey. The survey was given to 86 people rrom NIC and the community, and 76 people filled oul the survey while seven people refused. According to the results of the survey. only 44 percent (34) knew nbout the proposed herbicide sprayings of the Idaho forests. About 52 percent (40) were unaware or ihe sproyings. and 2 pcrcen t were not sure. However, the popuJarity of Agent Orange (herbicide orange) is more widely known. Approximately 73 percent (56) of the people surveyed know of Agent Orange. IS percent (12) did not know and only 10 percent (8) were uncertain. or 1he indhiduals surveyed, 42 percent (32) hove children and 28 percent (22) bold 1hat they would not be able to occcpt o physically defcc1ivc child due 10 the aftcrcHccts of the pnrent(s) being expo,ed to Agent Orange. TI1cse aftereffects of the children. if they live, rnnge from mii.slng bones and arm& to death of the fetu~. The cmploymco1 situation of North Idaho looks grim: however. of the SO percent (38) of the 1>cople who ore

Tim Sternberg lrlcs hli. best to beat the farthest mark In lhc keg tbrowlog <'O olc6t h eld a t the Camp us Due picnic last Frida).

working, 29 percent (22) said that they would help to clear the forests manually. Others said they would ,.'Ork for summer employment, v. hile others were undecided or did not care. Liz Merrill. member of the Kootenai Environmcai31 Alliance. said that she could not believe lhe public response when the herbicide spraying contro· versy began. People have said that they .. don·, want that shit sprayed on my kids.·· according to Merrill. There were many comments about the spraying of herbicides on Idaho forests. One person said it is a ,.•aste of time and money and that people should let mother nature take care of the forests. Anothe r person commented that .. they (the chemicals) should be kept for the care of the fine gardens in Woshangton D.C... It seems that e\'cn with the large rc~ponsc the public ha~ shov. n. the United States Forest Sen·ice WSFS) is going to spray the forests any.. ay Early 1hb summer. 325 acres ore 10 be :.prnyed in the AHr) Ranger Dbtnct. The herb1t1dcs to be used are 2.4-0. Garlon and Roundup. A copy of the USFS Fina.I en,;ronmcnt11l Impact Stotemcnt can be obtained :u the USFS office located at 1201 Ironwood Drive in Coeur d'Alene. For more information on herbicides and the proposed ~prayiagi., the Kootennt Em•ironmcntal Alliance of· lil'e can be found 111 IOJ S. 4th St 1n Coeur d.Alenc.

Rot treak Assistant aoctlonttr Beth Nelson I.al.cs a brcu to try her lack with the dice at the Casino '1.g bt AprO 30 wblch was spouso~ b) Sherman Ball. Partlclpants used satp mone} to pla) roulcue, poker, blackjaek, craps and to bid for pritts In hourly auNlons.


May 7, 1981/Cardlnal Review -16-

Ahhhh

(__n_i_c_n_o_t_ic_e_s_~J

Selling suds summer job Free enterprise is ahve and at ,.·ork m the realm of 3c::tdcmics. T""-o IC students plan to cnm the money for ne.tt year's tuiuoo b~ selling kegs of beer llus summer. Gary Cross and M1thael Morcgeau have obtained a retail license and ha\'e sent for their beer license They will lease a shop at 1302 Sherman A\·c. The beer shop will be called Kegs To Go. and the main objecti\·e, acrordmg to Mongeau. is to undersell c,.eryone el~ m l~n. " We're real excited about 1h1s," Mongeau ~id. "and we 11,·ant 10 help people parry the chc.;pcst "-I} they can. · Cross and Mongeau plan to sell St",CD kinds of beer-and possibly ciguc11cs and sandwiches. They Jrt' ,.illmg to adJUSt their stock to meet customers' wants. Mongeau described a couplt nf spec,al dcal.s t ~ have m store. Some Kegs To Go cards will be printed op and left around town. Those v.ho bnng one in ,,.;11 receh·e a SJ di!>count. Also student ID) ll'lll be accepted for half of the deposit on the tap and keg. The building has been leased for a) ear. Mongeau said that thcry expect business to drop off during the winter. but that they should do well in the summemme. The pair hope to open K~s To Go by May 14. Just i.o umc for finals weekend.

Registration set for fall semester Students plaoning 10 ancod the 1982 fall semester at NIC need to register by Aug. 26. This will nlso be the liist dey 10 pay tuition and fees without penalty. NIC freshmen planning to return next ye:i.r fflll.)' preregister in Jone, but a final date h3S not yet been set. according to Registnu llSUko Nishio. Foll semester classes will begin Aug. JO. The l.a st da) 10 WJtbdra\\ ft-om cluscs will be No,•. 8.

Those sllldcncs who ba,e ttttlnd parldng noes must pay lhcm to the La" Eri.Corcement Departmen t before their ~ripts wUl be sent to lbelr transferring colleges. Altu lO days of the fine not being paid, SI per day wnl be added untU the line Is paid. Stvden~ plAnnlog to re.rum to NlC nut ) ear should rum In appUcatJons for r eadmlsslo11 before leaving for sum.m er bred.

Students who live In •tatc bat out of district mDJI ba\'C, anolhet certificate or res.klclX'y aent to the Rcglwtn.r's oHlcc before the begin ning or fall Strm'!!ter 1981. All gnul utlng or transferring Ila· dents with National Dlttct or N1m1lng Student Loans s hould contact Da\ld Parker In the Bus in ess Orrt ce 10 scheduJc an e:rll Interview as soon u pos.5lblc.

Students and facully arc reminded not to park In the 101 by the Shenna.o Cbapcl or Fo11 Ground Church directly cas1 of the CA Bulldlng. Violators wlll ha, c their \ cblclell to.,·ed away.

Student, ln1crestcd In working on the activi ti es committee for nCJtl year pick up applltttlou In the SUB Crom Dean beMcll.

Students s hould remember that If the) are enrolled for 10 or more credits tbh scm.c slcr, they arc covered by medical l.nsuruco unUI Aug. 16.

Ona! 11nules maJlcd lo them mus-I leave a sclf,adclrcued stamped envtlope at

Studcnta who wish to ban~ thel,

"Skate for Special Olympl~" wlJI be lH!ld May 12 from 6:30 to 9:30 p,m, at the Slw.e Plaza, Coeur d 'Alene. All proceeds will benefll tho Coe ur d'Alene SpcclaJ OlymplCI!.

U-Haul has it all.

the Reglstnr 11 office. The NlC-PAFLT Foreign l.aJ'.lguaac Festival wlU 8how three O.l n11 slmulta· neou11ly at 12:15 p .m. today:

" Lo• Otvtdadoa'' (Spanlt b)··CA'.220 " Blue Angel" (German(,Bonner Room "Mr. Hulat's llollday"IFrc.ochl·LS I

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